|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Cat in Zero-G MOV file
As the original seems to have been deleted or something, here's a copy.
http://up-ship.com/Stuff/cat.mov |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
As the original seems to have been deleted or something, here's a copy. http://up-ship.com/Stuff/cat.mov did they really toss the cat? looks kinda cruel, and I dont like cats... .. .. End the dangerous wasteful shuttle now before it kills any more astronauts.... |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
In message , bob haller
writes As the original seems to have been deleted or something, here's a copy. http://up-ship.com/Stuff/cat.mov did they really toss the cat? looks kinda cruel, and I dont like cats... The US space program has a long and inglorious history of going beyond what most people would consider acceptable in its treatment of animals - "testing chimpanzees to destruction" in centrifuges, the early V2 experiments, the "training" described in "The Right Stuff". -- What have they got to hide? Release the ESA Beagle 2 report. Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
As the original seems to have been deleted or something, here's a copy. http://up-ship.com/Stuff/cat.mov did they really toss the cat? looks kinda cruel, and I dont like cats... The US space program has a long and inglorious history of going beyond what most people would consider acceptable in its treatment of animals - "testing chimpanzees to destruction" in centrifuges, the early V2 experiments, the "training" described in "The Right Stuff". I agree, unfortunately. Still, I watched the MOV file; I would have expected the ASCAN (at least, he dresses like one) to release the cat into mid-air zero-G, not throw the thing up hard against the opposite cabin wall. All the while, the two "ladies" (ASCANs as well?) are looking on like it's a hoot... Not very PC these days. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 20:12:17 +0000, Vincent D. DeSimone wrote:
I agree, unfortunately. Still, I watched the MOV file; I would have expected the ASCAN (at least, he dresses like one) to release the cat into mid-air zero-G, not throw the thing up hard against the opposite cabin wall. More than likely testing to see if the cat would orient to the approaching wall as if it were the "ground"... but I would like to see the written proposal, goals, methodology, and data recorded for this experiment... if there were any. -- Chuck Stewart "Anime-style catgirls: Threat? Menace? Or just studying algebra?" |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Jonathan Silverlight wrote: The US space program has a long and inglorious history of going beyond what most people would consider acceptable in its treatment of animals - "testing chimpanzees to destruction" in centrifuges, the early V2 experiments, the "training" described in "The Right Stuff". Back when von Braun was in his school days, he constructed a homemade centrifuge out of a bicycle wheel and a can; a mouse was placed in the can, and the gizmo revved up to high RPM- the result was a thin horizontal stripe of mouse blood on all four of the walls of the room that the centrifuge was in. Pat |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Vincent D. DeSimone wrote: I agree, unfortunately. Still, I watched the MOV file; I would have expected the ASCAN (at least, he dresses like one) to release the cat into mid-air zero-G, not throw the thing up hard against the opposite cabin wall. I think the intention was to see if it would arrive at the wall feet-first, as it would if it were falling toward the ground. Pat |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
In message , Pat Flannery
writes Jonathan Silverlight wrote: The US space program has a long and inglorious history of going beyond what most people would consider acceptable in its treatment of animals - "testing chimpanzees to destruction" in centrifuges, the early V2 experiments, the "training" described in "The Right Stuff". Back when von Braun was in his school days, he constructed a homemade centrifuge out of a bicycle wheel and a can; a mouse was placed in the can, and the gizmo revved up to high RPM- the result was a thin horizontal stripe of mouse blood on all four of the walls of the room that the centrifuge was in. Von Braun should have been jailed with the other war criminals. If his record hadn't been sanitised he would never have been allowed into the USA. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
Jonathan Silverlight wrote: Von Braun should have been jailed with the other war criminals. In general, only war criminals are so jailed. Von Braun was not. He did the bulk of his work in R&D, and was not in the slightest responsible for slave labor. That was Dornberger. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
On or about Wed, 03 Nov 2004 17:56:13 -0600, Pat Flannery made the sensational claim that:
I think the intention was to see if it would arrive at the wall feet-first, as it would if it were falling toward the ground. Only if it had had buttered toast on its back. -- This is a siggy | To E-mail, do note | Just because something It's properly formatted | who you mean to reply-to | is possible, doesn't No person, none, care | and it will reach me | mean it can happen |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Compressing an AVI File by a Moving Integration & Media Player | W. Watson | Amateur Astronomy | 8 | February 11th 04 09:45 PM |
VxWorks (?) Flash File System on the MERs | Jan C. Vorbrüggen | Technology | 6 | February 6th 04 04:39 AM |
./setiathome: Exec format error. Binary file not executable. | Rollo | SETI | 2 | January 5th 04 09:32 PM |
currupt file | mack rc jonathan | SETI | 4 | November 30th 03 12:07 PM |
AAVSO file type question | Hogrider | Amateur Astronomy | 4 | September 22nd 03 04:42 PM |